The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Car accidentstidy-crane-685

Can't stop replaying my crash in my head — is this normal? I keep seeing it when I try to sleep

I don't really have anywhere else to say this so I'm just going to put it out here.

Three weeks ago I was driving to an early shift — maybe 5:30am, barely any traffic, light fog. The road curves gently near an overpass and I've driven it probably a thousand times. Out of nowhere my back tires let go completely. No warning. I didn't overcorrect, I didn't do anything wrong that I can figure out — the car just went. I crossed into the oncoming lane, clipped a guardrail, and ended up nose-down in the drainage ditch on the opposite shoulder. The whole thing took maybe four seconds.

Physically I got off pretty lucky, I guess — bruised ribs, a gnarly seatbelt welt across my chest, and some neck stiffness that's still lingering. Car is a total loss.

But here's what's getting to me: I cannot stop seeing it. I'll be fine all day and then the second I lie down to sleep it just loops. The way the guardrail came up fast. The sound. I keep second-guessing whether I could have done something different even though logically I don't think so.

I talked to my doctor and she mentioned something about acute stress response and referred me to someone, which I appreciate. But I guess I just wanted to know — has anyone else gone through this after a crash that wasn't even "that bad" on paper? Does it eventually quiet down? I feel kind of embarrassed that I'm struggling with something I technically walked away from.

13replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

13 replies

  • 5
    keen-wolf-070

    Please don't feel embarrassed — I said almost the exact same thing to my therapist after my accident. 'I walked away, so why am I like this?' She told me trauma isn't measured by the damage report, it's measured by what your nervous system experienced. Mine took about six weeks before the nighttime replays started spacing out. Hang in there.

    • 0
      weary-rider575

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 17
    silent-wren-785

    What you're describing — the intrusive replays, the hyperawareness at bedtime, the second-guessing — those are really textbook acute stress responses after a sudden-threat event. Your brain literally recorded it as a survival moment and it's trying to process that. The fact that your doctor already made a referral is genuinely the right move. Don't cancel that appointment even if you start feeling better, because sometimes the symptoms dip and then spike again around weeks four to six.

    • 13
      warm-swan-461

      Seconding the above. I used to work claims and those early recorded calls happen fast on purpose — before you fully know the extent of your injuries or how you're actually doing mentally. You have every right to say you're still being evaluated and not answer detailed health questions on the phone. Don't feel rude about it.

  • 12
    gentle-kestrel-042

    Ugh, reading this made my chest tight. I'm glad you wrote it out. Sometimes just getting it out of your body and into words helps even a little. You're not being dramatic — four seconds of thinking you might die is not a small thing.

    • 0
      thankful-mile-marker170

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 9
    tidy-newt-990

    Two things: keep that therapy appointment, and also get your neck properly evaluated if you haven't had imaging done yet. Whiplash-type injuries love to hide for a few weeks and then announce themselves. Don't let anyone — including yourself — brush it off just because you feel 'okay enough.'

    • 2
      steady-passenger871

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 12
    quiet-dove-824

    Not legal advice, but one thing worth thinking about: if the road condition or a maintenance issue contributed to your tires losing traction — drainage problem, unmarked ice patch, deteriorated pavement — there may be more parties involved than just your own insurance. Worth at least having a quick conversation with a PI attorney before you sign anything. Most do free consults. Just something to keep in mind while you're focused on recovering.

  • 9
    warm-crow-370

    Watch out for your adjuster calling you and asking how you're 'feeling these days.' That's not small talk. If you say 'better' or 'pretty good' they will absolutely use that in their notes. Keep it factual and short, or better yet let everything go through writing.

    • 3
      weary-driver515

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 5
    patient-hare-611

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that your brain won't let you forget it is actually it trying to protect you — it's doing its job. The replays do fade. And the version of you that crawled out of that situation and then immediately thought 'I need to deal with this'? That's someone who's going to be okay.

    • 8
      weary-walker814

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?